Source:
Columbus DispatchA group of Columbus pastors is asking the Internal Revenue Service to investigate whether certain members of Congress owe taxes and penalties on cut-rate rent from a Washington boarding house that has a tax exemption as a church.
If the members did pay below-market rental rates to the C Street Center and did not report it as income, "then the members may have significant unreported income-tax liabilities," the pastors say in a complaint filed yesterday with the IRS.
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He and 12 other pastors from mainstream Christian denominations filed a complaint with the IRS on Feb. 23 challenging the tax-exempt status of the C Street Center, a red-brick house at 133 C St. SE, just a short walk from the Capitol. The pastors said they are concerned that the center is "an exclusive residential club for powerful officials (that) may be masquerading as a church."
In yesterday's supplement to the February complaint, the pastors cite a published report that, in 2009, members of Congress living at the C Street Center paid $950 per month in rent. Comparing the C Street Center to a small hotel or a bed-and-breakfast - it has 12 furnished bedrooms, nine bathrooms, five living rooms and housekeeping services - the pastors said the center is charging well below market rent to the members.
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http://www.dispatchpolitics.com/live/content/local_news/stories/2010/03/30/copy/lawmakers-got-a-deal-on-rent-pastors-charge.html?adsec=politics&sid=101